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IN-DEPTH INTERVIEW MASTER TOPIC GUIDE
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SUSTAINABILITY STUDY OF TEEN PREGNANCY PREVENTION PROGRAMS
IN-DEPTH INTERVIEW MASTER TOPIC GUIDE
The Sustainability Study of Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs will gather detailed information from grantees on (1) whether the program was sustained after the first round of grant funding (2) the programmatic, organizational, and contextual factors affected program sustainability, (3) what methods and strategies were used to sustain the program(s) and (4) the main lessons learned in planning for and sustaining the program(s). Researchers will gather this information through review of grantee documents, the Grantee survey, and two rounds of 90-minute telephone interviews with key respondents such as the program director and/or other staff involved in sustainability planning for a set of selected grantees.
The Master Topic Guide provides a list of topics to be covered in the key respondent telephone interviews. The topics may be tailored to each grantee based on their status (i.e. sustained or not sustained), and their funding stream. Some of the topics listed in this Topic Guide will only be covered in Round 1 of the interviews to clarify or confirm responses from the Grantee survey or information collected during the document review.
Identifying Information [to be completed by Interviewer]:
Grantee Organization Name |
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Program(s) Funded in 2010 |
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Curriculum Used |
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Respondent Name |
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Respondent Phone Number |
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Date and Time of Call |
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Interviewer Name |
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Other Comments |
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Mission of the organization (Round 1)
Geographic locations, and any expansion or changes since grant period ended
History of teen pregnancy prevention programs implemented by agency (Round 1)
Other types of programs and services delivered by agency (Round 1)
Organizational structure and changes since grant period ended
Partnerships to support program implementation [confirm based on survey] and any changes since grant period ended
Funding sources [confirm based on survey] and any changes since grant period ended
Changes in past and current operating budget (as a result of OAH/CDC grant funds)
If not implementing agency, relationship with implementing agency or agencies (Round 1)
Description of implementing agency or agencies (number, type, setting, location, goals, etc)
Names of OAH or CDC-funded program(s)
Current status of program(s) – Rounds 1 and 2
Goals of funded program(s) and fit with grantee (and/or implementing agency) mission
Type of program (evidence-based, new program or service, adaptation)
Program implementation
Curriculum name
Program length
Number of staff, staff training, supervision, and professional development opportunities
Sites and setting
Formal or informal adaptations
Enrollment, dosage, and retention
Challenges to program participation
Overall challenges and successes
Perceived quality of implementation
Frontline and administrative staff receptiveness at the start, during, and at the end of programming
Youth receptiveness to the program
Program costs (start-up, operations, other expenses)
Differences in expected and actual costs
Relationship with, access to, support provided by program developer
Training on program
Implementation readiness of program
Champions of program(s) at grantee organization, implementing agency and/or in community
Efforts to replicate program(s) (Rounds 1 and 2)
Outcome of program evaluation (Rounds 1 and 2)
Grantees’ definition and goals for sustainability
Steps taken during grant period to sustain funded teen pregnancy prevention program(s) (Round 1)
Steps taken after grant period to sustain funded program(s)
Requirements of funding program and funders
Timing of planning for sustainability
Changes made to funded program(s)’ model, structure, or other aspects for the purpose of sustaining it
Types of technical assistance received for planning for sustainability
Which TA was most useful and why; what was not useful and why
Recommendations for future grantees and funding efforts
Sources of technical assistance
Sufficiency of funds from grant to deliver program
Percentage of program costs (start-up, implementation, evaluation, other) that came from grant
Funding sources in addition to OAH grant
Efforts to apply for additional funding
For programs that were not sustained or that are being delivered by a different organization:
Reasons for not sustaining program at the same organization
Factors that affected the decision to not sustain program
For programs that were sustained:
Specific strategies that were successful
Factors that affected grantee’s ability to sustain the program
Challenges in planning for sustainability
Political climate and changes since grant period ended
State laws and requirements and changes since grant period ended
Engagement with community leaders and stakeholders and changes since grant period ended
Community receptiveness at the start, during, and at the end of programming
Historical presence and integration of grantee and program into local community
Buy-in from key partners and target population, and changes since grant period ended
Other funding sources in community and any changes after grant period ended
Other TPP programs or services in community and any changes after grant period ended
Strategies that were key in sustaining programs that remained active (short and long term)
Perceived organizational, programmatic and environmental factors that played a role in whether or not a program was sustained (short and long-term)
Main challenges for grantees who were not successful in sustaining funded programs
Impact of evaluation on sustainability decisions (if applicable)
Types and timing of support and technical assistance that is critical in ensuring success in the short and long-term
Recommendations for funding agencies from grantees
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Dawn Patterson |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-23 |